You can look at it as someone not getting more open minded, or someone entering the porn industry with a clear idea of what their line in the sand is.
I agree. I was just responding to the question.
By pointing out he wasn’t some sheltered 18 year old entering the adult entertainment. He was a grown man with a child and years of experience as a stripper in gay bars. He knew from day one what he was comfortable doing on camera.
His boundaries then and now aren’t the issue. They never were. He has every right to set his boundaries and to produce and sell whatever content he wants to sell.
The problem when he was at Next Door was he kept saying he was “getting comfortable” and “testing boundaries” so just subscribe and maybe the next video would be the one. Then he shot a bunch of faked sex scene and when his contract was up for renewal refused to do anything different so they chose not to resign him.
Fine. They said they wanted him to do more and he felt like he was popular enough and financially stable enough to refuse. He thought he could get work with other studios doing the same thing he did at NDS but the only work he could get with those restrictions was with a wrestling fetish studio that shot non sex grappling scenes but they couldn’t afford him for more than a few scenes.
All his choice, his price, and his restrictions.
Then he negotiated a return to NDS where he pledged to the studio and his fans that he was going to finally do everything they want him to do. He returned but it soon became clear he wasn’t willing to fulfill the deal he signed. They fired him.
He has the right to set his own boundaries and sell what he wants. Provide he doesn’t resort to deceptive marketing.
People just need to know that he’s even less “open minded” and less likely to shoot gay-content now before they sign up expecting something new.